Go | New | Find | Notify | Tools | Reply |
Found this on Stuart's site, not sure of the source: NTSB's New Direction To Include More High Tech Proclaiming that "the days of kicking tin are over," National Transportation Safety Board Chairman Marion Blakey yesterday said her agency's future direction would include using more advanced technologies and becoming a more open, knowledge-sharing operation. Blakey, speaking to the Aero Club in Washington, said NTSB's future tools will be more high tech, and industry and academic input will be encouraged. "Computer data has become much more important" in analyzing aircraft crashes, she said, praising recent cooperative work with NASA on several technologies, including composites. "As accidents become more complex, we need the party process," she said, pressing for an end to "dueling press conferences and hallway leaks." After the Emery crash hearings had to be adjourned "because witnesses were less than forthright with important information," Blakey called on all parties to pledge total cooperation. "We all need to step up to a higher level of responsibility." Several internal and industry reports have made suggestions about how the board might be improved. While each report "had a particular agenda," Blakey has found many helpful suggestions in between political motivations. "We've taken a hard look at ourselves," she said. "We've identified weaknesses and have gone about fixing them." NTSB needs to "improve internal training and...outside support." Sharing And Openness The board's new NTSB Academy is scheduled to open in late 2003 and Blakey sees this as an opening for better sharing and openness. "Sharing our knowledge is critical," she said. "This is a wonderful opportunity to bring expertise to us." The facility will allow the board to expand its lab with new technologies and equipment. Blakey said NTSB has begun meetings with DOT about the more than 300 open safety recommendations that have been given to FAA. "We need to sit down, mano a mano, and not discuss this through letters," she said. The board also is pressing individual states to address the 3,000 safety recommendations still left unanswered. "We need to deal with all of them," she said. | |||
|
Of course we still have the FAA to screw up any progress... | ||||
|
Powered by Social Strata |
Please Wait. Your request is being processed... |